Pages

Thursday, March 15, 2012

Hopefully this is going to be the last wintery-cold weather recipe for the next six months at least.

Don't get me wrong. This pie tastes delicious. But I'm so looking forward to spring and seasonal food such as asparagus, strawberries, peaches, rasberries, arugula etc...

As I mentioned in my previous post, I haven't been cooking that much lately, or at least not that much new or worth posting. But luckily I have a very ambitious fiance in Wil, at least when it comes to all kinds of meat dishes. He is currently curing his third bacon (which we are going to smoke afterwards), made pork rillettes and his own trotter gear (which is part of this guiness pie recipe, as well).

- Wil used whole wheat flour, which gave the pie crust a much heartier flavor.

2 1/4 teaspoons baking powder

3/4 teaspoon salt

- he added a pinch of sugar and a dash of cinnamon to the dough, to make it less bland.

1/2 cup (1 stick) very cold unsalted butter, diced

1 egg yolk, lightly beaten.

Directions:

1. Preheat the oven to 375 degrees.

2.
In a large, ovenproof pan fitted with a lid, heat 2 tablespoons of the
butter over medium-low heat. Add the onions and garlic and cook,
stirring frequently, until soft, about 10 minutes.

3. Add the
carrots, celery/celeriac, potatos, parsnip, radishes, turnip, dried mushrooms and remaining 2 tablespoons butter and cook
over medium heat, stirring frequently, until the mushrooms are dark in
color and the moisture released by them has evaporated, about 15
minutes (that doesn't count for the dried mushrooms, of course!).

4. Season the beef pieces all over with salt and pepper.
Add the beef, flour (Wil coated the meat in the flour) and rosemary to the pan and cook/brown over high heat,
stirring often, for about 5 minutes.

5. Add enough Guinness to
just cover the beef. Cover the pan and put it in the oven for 1 1/2
hours. Remove from the oven and stir. If using trotter gear, stir it in
now (Wil went a little heavier on the trotter gear. It's just too good and rich!). Return to the oven and cook for 1 hour more. If it remains thin,
set the pan over medium-low heat, remove the lid and reduce the liquid.
Season to taste with salt and pepper. If using Cheddar, fold in about
half.

6. While the stew is cooking, prepare the pastry: sift
together the flour, baking powder and salt into a bowl. Using a pastry
cutter or your hands, quickly work the butter into the dough until it is
the texture of coarse meal. Add ice water, a splash at a time, until a
firm dough forms. Wrap the dough in plastic and refrigerate for at least
2 hours.

7. Place the dough between two sheets of plastic wrap
and, using a rolling pin, roll to the thickness of a computer mouse pad.
Pour the stew into an 8-inch-square, 2-inch-high Pyrex dish or a deep
9-inch pie pan. If using Cheddar, scatter the remaining cheese across the top.
Place the dough on top of the pie and pinch it closed around the edges
using the tines of a fork, then slash the center lightly with a knife.
Brush with the egg yolk, place on a baking sheet and bake for 45
minutes, or until the pastry is puffy and golden.

Serves 6.

The original stew was adapted from Jamie Oliver; the original pastry was adapted from Fergus Henderson.

Notes:

Feel free to go heavy on the spices and seasoning. If you decide to use paprika, that's great and will definitely be a good fit. But please remember that this will give your British stew certainly a Hungarian twist. That's not bad at all. But if you want to keep it British you may better want to save the paprika for your next Gulasch. I would suggest, instead of using it here to rather find spices other than paprika to finish up your Guiness pie, even if this seems to be a bigger challenge.

Regarding the pie crust, I can say, that we are still trying to find the recipe for the perfectly soft but at the same time crunchy crust. The dough also should be flavorful, but not compete with the stew flavors either.

The whole wheat with some sugar, salt and cinnamon was an excellent decision. But the consistency was still a little bit too caky. We'll work on that and let you know how it goes...